OPINION There are three little words to make the heart beat faster in anyone who knows what they mean: critical infrastructure resilience. If you run that infrastructure or a country dependent on it, you need energy, communication and transport to be impregnable to cyber attacks. This is doubly so if that country is five minutes by incoming missile from an implacable hyper-competent enemy sworn to invade you. One that is building and equipping its military as fast as it can with this one thing in mind. One with the most invasive and brazen state hacking machinery on the planet. Thus it was a very bad day indeed when Taiwan’s entire bullet train system was disabled for nearly an hour by an unknown attacker. It got even worse when that attacker turned out not to be the implacable and hyper-resourced state actor over the Taiwan Strait, but a university student with a yen for radio and some kit he bought online. On the one hand, it’s good to see the good repair of the grand tradition of young hackers causing havoc from their bedrooms. On the other, WTRF? The information released by the Taiwanese authorities is scant on details, but enough to be pretty sure what actually happened. It’s bad news not just for Taiwan but for more than 100 countries that also use the TETRA two-way radio standard involved, often for emergency services. In many cases, it was the default replacement for unencrypted FM two-way radios, adding encryption, flexibility and network security. These were state of the art when TETRA was developed in the 1980s and 1990s — and work as well in 2026 as you might expect. Oops. There have been upgrades and, especially after the 2023 vulnerability disclosures, an accelerated program of making things better. A lot of the installed base globally is old, lacks over-the-air updates for security, and in any case spending money on new radios is normally at the bottom of the list for any state or public service organizations. Things have to get really bad first. Perhaps they just have. (North America is the only region where TETRA is uncommon, as it isn’t approved for public service use. This was either acute foresight or the fact that the TE in TETRA, now officially TErrestrial, used to stand for Trans-Europe. The American system, P.25, has never, however, been renamed Freedom Frequencies. Now on with the show) The network vulnerabilities are one side of the story. Our doughty hacker is the other. Reportedly, he didn’t have any TETRA hardware, but a laptop connected to a radio and an ‘SDR filter’. The latter makes little sense, it is far more likely that he had a software defined radio (SDR) called a HackRF. There are plenty of other devices that could have been used, but the HackRF is the weapon of choice for the gung-ho radio nut. SDR is a technique that has completely changed the rules of how to radio. All radios before it had to be entirely or mostly analog, with precision hardware dedicated to whatever job each radio had to do. This hardware could also be looked at as an analog computer, as it can be modelled as a set of mathematical transformations on the received signal. Analog computers have their place, just not in the 21st century. SDR is radio as digital computer. At heart, it has three components: an analog to digital converter to turn the incoming signal to a stream of numbers, very fast processing to do the radio math, and a digital to analogue converter to play the results. What you get is triply terrific. Digital processing is perfect, analog processing adds noise and distortion. Nothing is fixed, everything can be re-engineered with new code. And it can be hog-whimperingly cheap. HackRF is all those things and more. It can be configured as a portable touch-screen device. It transmits and receives from DC to daylight. You can pick one up for less than the price of a mid-range mobile. It is open source. It works with all manner of SDR creation tools, utilities and radio packages. There are infinite legitimate uses. Most excitingly, you can download apps for it that do everything, most especially the kind of thing that will introduce you with surprisingly rapidity to a wide range of new friends with no sense of humor and love letters that look suspiciously like arrest warrants. Think of it as speed dating but with more guns and less no thank yous, GPS spoofing, aviation and marine location transponders, satellite comms, data eavesdropping and injection - take your pick. You’ll need it to unlock the cell door. It is the data detection and injection that seems to have been the downfall of all concerned. A handset had its transmission decoded, and the result was retransmitted into the system as if it were that original radio. Whether the decoded data already had the General Alarm set, or whether the data had to be modified before retransmission, is not yet known. Doesn’t matter. It’s called a replay attack, and it has and is mostly used in stand-alone devices called code grabbers to unlock and steal expensive cars with wireless keys. Some countries, including Canada and the UK, have banned code grabbers, but this has failed on two counts. Code grabbers are small gadgets that can be bought online from China, and good luck policing that. Also, thieves are notably indifferent to laws. That notwithstanding, the UK is thinking of extending the ban to other classes of naughty wireless, and would doubtless like to do the same with HackRF, at least as of last week. Of course, they can’t be banned. SDRs can’t be banned as a class, especially open source ones made out of standard chips and open code. They are general purpose computers, albeit with specialisms. It doesn’t matter if you’re dismayed or delighted that things like HackRF exist, that genie is out of the bottle. What is truly dismaying is that replay attacks are a solved problem, trivially so. Choose a big keyspace, randomize and never repeat keys. That one is on lazy car makers and, apparently, the world of TETRA. Fixing that class of lazy, outdated security vulnerability will be very expensive. Embedded systems are like that, especially old ones. Not fixing this will be a gamble with infinite downside, in a world where electronic warfare systems that used to cost hundreds of millions now pour out of Ali Express for a few bucks. HackRF is to Tetra like Crocodile Dundee’s knife is to the mugger’s. Critical infrastructure resilience. Just three little words, but if you say them you better mean it. And it won’t be cheap. ®